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Weather - Hurricane Center

Tropical Storm Fay comes ashore in Florida

11:02 AM EDT on Tuesday, August 19, 2008

By MATT SEDENSKY / Associated Press




Fay makes landfall

NAPLES, Fla. -- Tropical Storm Fay moved inland Tuesday after making landfall in southwest Florida, bringing soaking rains and gusty winds but failing to reach the minimal hurricane status that had been predicted.

The storm may not provide immediate drought relief for western North Carolina, but forecasters predict rain could still fall in the region.

National Weather Service meteorologist Doug Outlaw said Tuesday the weather watchers need to be patient. Outlaw said one forecast track shows the storm moving over Memphis, Tenn., in a week. Another forecast shows it over central South Carolina and moving northeast.

Hopes were high that Fay would bring relief for drought-ravaged sections of North Carolina and South Carolina. But a high pressure weather system is blocking Fay's movement and is expected to hold it over Florida and Georgia this week.

Outlaw said there is such a wide range of possibilities that "we're just going to have to wait."

In Naples, Fla., streets were largely deserted in the early morning hours. Rain swept across desolate streets that were littered with palm fronds and other minor debris, and there was street flooding in spots but no immediate reports of storm surge damage.

Diana Eslick, an assistant manager at a 7-Eleven near the beach in Naples, said the storm hadn't disrupted her morning at work.

"So far it's going good. We have power and everything," she said. "It's just been windy and rainy."

The main thing she was preparing for was hungry surfers looking for food before they start taking advantage of Fay's waves.

Farther up the coast, Lori Martini, 42, of South Tampa, went out on her 6-mile jog a little before 5 a.m., as usual. She said she'd checked the forecast before heading out.

"I figure if the storm comes, I may not be able to (run) tomorrow," Martini said.

At 8 a.m. EDT, the storm's center was located about 30 miles southeast of Fort Myers and was moving toward the northeast, with maximum winds of 60 mph expected to gradually weaken through the day.

Flooding remained a major concern as Fay heads up the Florida peninsula, with rainfall amounts forecast between 4 and 10 inches. The storm could also push tides 3 to 5 feet above normal and spawn tornadoes.

Fay never achieved hurricane status, and most businesses opted to go without any shutters or other window protection. Of those that did, some plywood carried messages aimed at major storms from the past -- "Pop Off Charley" and "Oh Wilma!" among them.

With no major Florida hurricanes in the past two years, officials were worried complacency could cost lives as they repeatedly urged people across the state to take Fay seriously. But no storm-related deaths or injuries have been reported.

Florida Power & Light reported nearly 33,000 homes without power in South Florida early Tuesday, the largest number in Collier County, where 12,500 were in the dark.

After crossing the Florida Keys without causing major damage Monday, Fay lumbered ashore about 5 a.m. Tuesday at Cape Romano, just south of Naples, with sustained winds of about 60 mph. That's well below the hurricane threshold of 74 mph. Cape Romano is the same spot where Hurricane Wilma, a Category 3 storm, made landfall in October 2005.

In the Tampa Bay area, Pinellas, Pasco and Hillsborough counties lifted evacuation orders affecting mobile home residents and others in vulnerable areas when the storm failed to reach hurricane status. But schools and government offices remained closed.

"I think we're going to all enjoy a nice summer day," said Sally Bishop, Pinellas County's emergency management director.

Before landfall, Fay stirred unpleasant memories for many in and around Punta Gorda who rode out deadly Hurricane Charley in 2004.

"I am scared," said Monica Palanza, a Punta Gorda real estate agent who watched trees topple on her neighbors' homes when Charley reached Category 4 strength -- the second-strongest level -- just north of Punta Gorda. "You can never be prepared enough."

But others said they were relieved Fay, the sixth named storm of the Atlantic tropical storm season, was no Charley and took a wait-and-see attitude.

"After going through Charley, this doesn't seem nothing more than a gust of wind," said Jesse Gilmore, 34, who put up storm shutters Monday at a local business as a precaution.

On Monday, as Fay headed toward the peninsula, schools and many businesses closed, even miles to the east in the Miami and Fort Lauderdale areas.

Southwest Florida International Airport near Fort Myers operated normally Monday, but airlines postponed about 140 flights Tuesday until evening hours, spokeswoman Victoria Moreland said.

Warnings to people to take precautions were issued as Fay spread rain and sent wind gusts of up to 51 mph over the Keys on Monday.

Monroe County Mayor Mario Di Gennaro estimated 25,000 fled the Keys before Fay hit there Monday afternoon.

The state took every step to make sure it was prepared. National Guard troops were at the ready and more were waiting in reserve, and 20 truckloads of tarps, 200 truckloads of water and 52 truckloads of food were available for distribution.

As it moved though the Caribbean, Fay was blamed for at least 14 deaths in Haiti and the Dominican Republic, including two babies who were found in a river after a bus crash.